Comment Re:Already prohibited (Score 1) 95
Even if Putin had a point, your statement is still an obvious distraction from the criticism leveled against him.
Even if Putin had a point, your statement is still an obvious distraction from the criticism leveled against him.
a). propaganda can work
b). who conducts the polls?
Sure, at this point, Russians deserve whatever it is they get (I guess). It's not like anyone should be crying for them. It would be better if they'd stop their self-destructive behavior. Also there's got to be a significant number of people staying quiet over there now that both Navalny and Prigozhin are dead.
Correct. Russia could sign on to a non-proliferation treaty today and violate it tomorrow. They just don't give a damn.
fabs
And 2017. Gah this is what I get for posting on mobile.
astroturfers. Speeling sucks.
Yeah I get it, they had yet another bad earnings report and their stock is down. Meanwhile, the tech community has been documenting Intel's struggles for years, despite the apologists and asteoturfers trying to make it seem like everything at Team Intel is just hunky dory.
Intel has been slowly falling apart since around 3017-2018. And the seeds for that were planted further back. They may have reached the point of no return.
You really think Intel is moving to a "1.8nm process" later this year? Stop drinking the Wylers.
Hah, Intel is too busy plundering the Feds to potentially spin off their gabs for Wall Street to plunder them.
Legacy x86 doesn't really mean anything from a compatibility standpoint or a performance standpoint. Yes orgs can figure out how to run on ARM now, but the predicted end to x86-64 CPU performance scaling never happened, so it's a wash.
x86 isn't holding Intel back.
Server was Intel's biggest profit sector up through Skylake-SP.
Intel's margins in dcg are awful. They're maintaining market share by practically giving away 10nm hardware. Once they move to Intel 4/3 and beyond, their volume will slide (Granite Rapids) and it'll be a disaster.
Um isn't this nearing a GDPR violation? Aren't you supposed to delete user data on request, instead of forcing them to laboriously delete it themselves?
It depends on the service running games on a server colocated near you. Think Netflix-style caching servers. If you aren't physically near any of the streaming services' game machines, yes, it can get a lot worse than +100ms input lag.
To write good code is a worthy challenge, and a source of civilized delight. -- stolen and paraphrased from William Safire